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Posted: 1/4/2010 2:40:39 PM EDT
I've seen pics but really what is a KP ak ? :) Thanks :D
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Whatever the tribesmen can cobble together
I think a true Khyber is a 7.62*39 AKM with the triangle side folding stock of an AKS-74. |
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Found this pic on the interwebs... might be an arfcommers http://i562.photobucket.com/albums/ss67/finslayer83/Khyber1.jpg That's really sweet looking. |
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you should change the title and make this a Khyber pic thread
I have a folding stoch mechanism, bakelite mag, and russian laminate HGs that will hopefully turn into a rifle. |
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Please note that the information I provide I got from This great book
A Khyber Pass AK is essentially a counterfeit AK made in very basic local workshops in the Khyber Pass corridor, a corridor that lies between Pakistan and Afghanistan. The locals of the Khyber Pass are Pathan clansmen, one of many clans who are fiercely independent and violent in the Paki/Afghan region. Khyber Pass AKs produced in these simle workshops are made from locally procured materials and while great copies they often lack heat treating and other procedures that insure a weapon can fire modern high-pressure ammo. The small village of Darra Adam Khel is located 40 kilometers south of Peshawar, Pakistan. The village is known for its firearms industry and has over 100 shops in the gun trade. During the early months of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Darra Adam Khel supplied the Mujahideen with weapons. Ammo is also produced there, one round at a time. Bullets are made from melted scrap metal, powder from unexploded ordnance, primers from matchheads. Other local workshops of note are located in Nooristan Province NE Afghanistan and Sakhakot, in Malakand region of Pakistan. The shops are made of mud and bricks. The local gunsmiths create accurate copies, mostly of Russian knockoffs using files, drill presses and small forges. They get the steel from railroad track rails, truck frames, springs, etc. |
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Short version when it comes to AK discussions on the internet: it generically means an AKM with an AK74 metal side folding stock. That means if I change my plastic folding stock on my wasr10 to a metal one, then I'll have a Kyber Pass.. |
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Short version when it comes to AK discussions on the internet: it generically means an AKM with an AK74 metal side folding stock. That means if I change my plastic folding stock on my wasr10 to a metal one, then I'll have a Kyber Pass.. You'd have to do a bit of work to get the side-folding buttstock adapted right to the receiver but you'd be there. |
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Short version when it comes to AK discussions on the internet: it generically means an AKM with an AK74 metal side folding stock. That means if I change my plastic folding stock on my wasr10 to a metal one, then I'll have a Kyber Pass.. You can call it whatever you want. I'm not a fan of made up nomenclature. I own a Romanian with a 74 sidefolder because its light years better than any underfolder. I don't refer to it as a "Khyber Pass" any more than I refer to my semi-auto AR carbines as "M4geries." The man asked what a Khyber Pass AK was. I gave him the generally accepted definition of that as commonly used in internet discussion forums. |
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Thats because a '74 is not a Khyber pass. KP ak's are 7.62 as other have stated in this thread.
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I personally wouldn't consider an AK a Khyber Pass AK unless it was made by locals in the Khyber Pass of Afghanistan/Pakistan. Most have a happy switch too. Probably none of us own a true Khyber Pass AK.
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I personally wouldn't consider an AK a Khyber Pass AK unless it was made by locals in the Khyber Pass of Afghanistan/Pakistan. Most have a happy switch too. Probably none of us own a true Khyber Pass AK. Agreed. If you have a true Kyber Pass AK, you have a lot of explaining to do... |
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My next AK will be a Kyhber Pass version, real or not... Those rifles look awsome.
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Wow! Now I got the "Khyber Pass" rash and I am itching to put one together...
So i guess this would be my "Shopping List" (Copy/add if you like): 1) Nodak NDS-1KP Receiver (1 US Part) 2) Romanian Non-G Parts Kit 3) Bulgarian Side-folding stock 4) Tapco G2 Double-Hook FCG (3 US Parts) 5) US Made Slant Muzzle Brake (1 US Part) 6) US Made AK Pistol Grip (1 US Part) 7) US Made AK Foregrip (1 US Part) TIme to get this going; anybody knows a good AK smith in the Central Florida area that can rivet the barrel/trunions into the receiver? Let me know. |
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Wow! Now I got the "Khyber Pass" rash and I am itching to put one together... So i guess this would be my "Shopping List" (Copy/add if you like): 1) Nodak NDS-1KP Receiver (1 US Part) 2) Romanian Non-G Parts Kit 3) Bulgarian Side-folding stock 4) Tapco G2 Double-Hook FCG (3 US Parts) 5) US Made Slant Muzzle Brake (1 US Part) 6) US Made AK Pistol Grip (1 US Part) 7) US Made AK Foregrip (1 US Part) TIme to get this going; anybody knows a good AK smith in the Central Florida area that can rivet the barrel/trunions into the receiver? Let me know. Foregrip isn't on the list of countable parts. |
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Wow! Now I got the "Khyber Pass" rash and I am itching to put one together... So i guess this would be my "Shopping List" (Copy/add if you like): 1) Nodak NDS-1KP Receiver (1 US Part) 2) Romanian Non-G Parts Kit 3) Bulgarian Side-folding stock 4) Tapco G2 Double-Hook FCG (3 US Parts) 5) US Made Slant Muzzle Brake (1 US Part) 6) US Made AK Pistol Grip (1 US Part) 7) US Made AK Foregrip (1 US Part) TIme to get this going; anybody knows a good AK smith in the Central Florida area that can rivet the barrel/trunions into the receiver? Let me know. Foregrip isn't on the list of countable parts. Well, iam still within the law on it, since I am adding the brake. |
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handguard (fore grip) IS on the 922r list.
You want a Single hook FCG as the Nodak receiver is set up for that. You could mod the receiver to accept a double hook, but is it worth the trouble to you? |
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handguard (fore grip) IS on the 922r list. handguard is, forward grip is NOT. look again sweetie. You want a Single hook FCG as the Nodak receiver is set up for that. You could mod the receiver to accept a double hook, but is it worth the trouble to you?
Actually, the double-hook in a receiver set up for a single is preferable, because it allows someone with a minimum of 3 brain cells to modify the trigger for zero overtravel. |
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Which one of these folding stocks for the NDS-1KP reciever? Any info would be greatly appreciated! I plan on building one just like sidecarnutz (Looks great!) Also, I plan on using Flat black Gunkote, when do I apply it and on what parts? Thanks!
NDS-1KP Reciever 1/3 way down Sidefolder 1 Sidefolder 2 |
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1 is the correct one, but i highly doubt they have it in stock.
DPH Arms sells a chinese-made knockoff, and trust me when you build with it you'll know it's exactly that. killed 3 bits and almost destroyed a fourth trying to modify an NDS-1KP to work with it. i guess that makes it more authentic, or something. |
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handguard (fore grip) IS on the 922r list. handguard is, forward grip is NOT. look again sweetie. You want a Single hook FCG as the Nodak receiver is set up for that. You could mod the receiver to accept a double hook, but is it worth the trouble to you?
Actually, the double-hook in a receiver set up for a single is preferable, because it allows someone with a minimum of 3 brain cells to modify the trigger for zero overtravel. Ferret, I know that you know what I am saying is correct. Someone with 3 braincells ought to be able to figure out that he was not talking about an add on "verticle fore grip" and I know you have many more then 3. If you wanted to argue as far as saying that you meant a romanian donkey dong, then again I know you know that putting a romanian handguard with a donkey dong on your rifle would add or subtract from a 922r count. Putting a double hook in as you describe will still require modifying the trigger. The OP may or may not have the tools or brain cells to do this. I was simply making him aware that it will not "Drop in" It saddens me that you have become the "Master Internet corrector guy" that you appear to be lately. I know unfortunate things have happened to you, but this is not the right way to deal with them sweetie. |
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Putting a double hook in as you describe will still require modifying the trigger. Yeah, that's probably why I said that whole thing about being able to modify it. I know unfortunate things have happened to you
do tell, what unfortunate things? |
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Quoted: it looks good from here! I love the bakelite with the palm swells. The straight ones, not so much. Excellent looking rifle!I've wanted a "Khyber Pass" rifle long before I knew there was a trendy name for it. I only shoot (own) 7.62X39 AK variants. I have no desire to get yet another rifle that requires a new caliber and all new magazines. However, I loved the look/function of a side-folding stock (triangle stock, that is). I learned that they aren't very common, because there is no such 'kit' that includes a triangle-folder in 7.62. In addition, I absolutely love bakelite, but alas, all the bakelite stock sets I found were for milled receivers... One day, I walked into my local shop, and there on the wall was my DREAM rifle! They had two, one was already sold. I told the shopkeep to take it off the wall, for it was mine! I had to go back with the scratch for it, but since we're friends, that was cool. I found a bakelite mag for it, and now I am one HAPPY camper! The rifle is built off a Romy G-kit, and is VERY nice. http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y95/jerrellwise/Gun%20Pics/rifles-15.jpg (I just wish I could find a 7.62 bakelite mag that would match the exact coloring of the handguards/grip.) |
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To be a TRUE Khyber Pass rifle it has to have a fine patina of rust on it, weld marks, beat well worn almost sand blasted laminated furniture, and various personal indigineous home gunsmithing adaptations like an extra long charging handle...no semi-auto notch...(full auto only) "engravings" on wood and metal, and extra sling studs in unusual places. Khyber rifles are rarely "pretty"...
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Nothing that a length of rope, a car bumper, and a 10 minute drive down a gravel road can't fix for that "rugged" look.
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edit[/img] thanks for the spam, you really contributed a lot to this discussion |
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Anybody know who can install a folder to a receiver? I got a mechanism from abroad but have no clue what to do with it
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edit[/url] thanks for the spam, you really contributed a lot to this discussion It was a troll account. He's banned. Please ignore the interruption. |
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Quick question. On the back of the side folding stocks, is it smooth or ribbed? I had ordered a stock from here but after a week they informed me that they didnt have any in stock. So i'm still in the hunt for one.
If any one has any info on the question above or where to get an original side folding stock I'd greatly appreciate it! |
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I used a Bulgy folder from back when Copes sold them.
Rolled sides and the but plate is ribbed. Near perfect fit in the NDS reciever. Something to remember when building a KP on a Romy G kit. The Romy barrel trunnion has a step in it just where you need to drill the hole for the latch pin. You'll need to build that step up and forwards a bit. I moved the step forwards 1/4" or so on mine. Then clean it up in a mill or with a file. Then you can drill it for the latch pin. Simple to do if you have a good MIG welder. |
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I used a Bulgy folder from back when Copes sold them. Rolled sides and the but plate is ribbed. Near perfect fit in the NDS reciever. Something to remember when building a KP on a Romy G kit. The Romy barrel trunnion has a step in it just where you need to drill the hole for the latch pin. You'll need to build that step up and forwards a bit. I moved the step forwards 1/4" or so on mine. Then clean it up in a mill or with a file. Then you can drill it for the latch pin. Simple to do if you have a good MIG welder. I did not have a welder so I used my dremel and a grinding stone to grind the step level so the drill bit would not walk. |
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Does anyone have any expierence with the reproduction Triangle folding stocks? Here
Again, any info would be greatly appreciated! |
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Nice looking AK
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Nice looking AK Thanks, It was a stressfull build but it came out good in the end. |
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I have never seen a red Bakelite 7.62 AK magazine besides in pictures.
But yeah, it's basically an AKM with the AK74 triangle folder and has the red magazine. |
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Does anyone have any expierence with the reproduction Triangle folding stocks? Here Again, any info would be greatly appreciated! If you have the means of obtaining the real thing, I would HIGHLY recommend doing so as opposed to that route. Scott really bent over backwards to find an affordable version of a high-demand low-supply item to help out the AK community. Unfortunately the quality of parts definitely leaves a lot to be desired. Trunnion dimensions are off slightly, but noticeably (both the holes and the back angle are slightly different from an NDS receiver), and the spring for the stock latch (in the trunnion, the large coil spring) can be fully compressed by hand. An authentic spring is VERY difficult to compress by hand. Also, the stock units will not interchange between trunnions (chinese vs. bulgarian, for example). My stock won't fit on my friend's KP build (he used the DPH unit), and his KP's stock won't fit on my AKS-74. If you're in a pinch, and don't have too much concern with the look of the final product, go for it. If you're not in a hurry, and want a first-rate-looking product, hold out for Russian or Bulgarian parts. |
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